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The Southern California Trojan: School of Citizenship and Public Administration, Vol. 2, No. 1, June 12, 1929

The Southern California Trojan: School of Citizenship and Public Administration, Vol. 2, No. 1, June 12, 1929

SCHOOL OF CITIZENSHIP
Deadline for all announcements and material for issues of the Short Course Trojan is 11 o’clock preceding date of publication. Material should be left at Mr. Olson’s office in room 251 of the Administration Building.
The Short Course Trojan will be issued each Tuesday and Friday during the two-weeks' session. Copies will be distributed free to all students and faculty members from the Students’ Store which is located in the Student Union.
ADMINISTRATION
AND
PUBLIC
VOLUME II.
Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, June 12, 1929.
NUMBER 1
Health Of Cities Subject Of New Chemistry Study
Braun Corporation Establishes Lectureship in Administration Course.
Providing a concentrated, semi-technical college course in Municipal Chemistry and Testing, a special lectureship has been established by the Braun Corporation of Los Angeles in the Division of Public Administration of the university.
J. A. Hartley, president of the Braun Corporation, states that in this educational program an opportunity is offered for the more efficient solution of chemical problems affecting the health and welfare of citizens.
Chemical aspects of sewage and waste disposal and water purification will be covered in the lectures.
A committee co-operating with the Division of Public Administration of S.C. in presenting the topics includes the following, of which Dr. K. V. Stone of the Los lAngeles County Health Department is chairman:
Frank Marks, City Chemist of Pasadena.
Herbert Goodall, City Chemist of Long Beach.
J. Y. Jewett, Testing Engineer of San Diego.
Dr. VV. II. Eaton, City Health Officer of Santa Barbara.
M. J. Holmes, of the Braun Corporation.
Dr. D. Weynik. Chemist of the Association Laboratory of Anaheim.
Dr. Carl Wilson of the Los Angeles Water Department.
AV. T. Knowlton of the City Engineers.
E. O. Slater; Arthur Maas; H. L. Payne; W. H. Laury.
John Carmen of the Los Angeles Health Department.
R. P. Goudey, resident engineer of the State Department of Public Health.
LAW DEANS FROM EAST MEMBERS OF FACULTY
Two deans from other states are included in the list of visiting faculty professors to teach in the 1929 Summer Session of the School of I*aw of the University of Southern California, which opens Monday, June 17, according to announcement of Dr. Justin Miller, Dean of the Trojan I .aw School.
Dean Malcolm McDermott of the College of Law of the University ot Tennessee and Dean Julian S. Waterman of the College of Daw of the University of Arkansas are to be in Los Angeles for the June 17 to August 30 session. Another visiting professor on the S. C. campus this summer is Professor Rudolf Hirsch-berg of the Institute of Air Law of the University ot Koenigsberg, Germany.
COURSE REPORTS MAY BE SECURED
Registered students in the summer course in public administration may order copies of the proceedings in each sei-tioin at a cost of $1.50 per section. The price to persons not registered in the short course will be $3.op per section.
Through special gifts, students in the Sanitary Engineering, Water Supply, anil Planning and Zoning Sections will be provided with copies of the Proceedings of their Sections without cost J
Order blanks may be filled out for 1hese Proceedings in the office of the School of Citizenship and Public Administration, I Room 251.
ROWELL TO TALK ON YOUTH TOPIC
i Publicist to Deliver Lectures on j Juvenile Welfare in Relation to Democracy.
Chester II. Rowell, publicist, is to lecture on youth and democracy during the second annual short course in public administration of the University of Southern California. Division B, starting Monday, June 17.
Others to participate in a program dealing with juvenile welfare are Huron Pitts, Dr. l^eRoy Bowman of Columbia University, John Collier, Will C. Wood, and Benjamin P. Pearson.
Co-operating with the University of Southern California in providing a summer course covering community responsibility for juvenile life are Bishop W. Bertrand Stevens, Dean Justin Miller of the Trojan Uw School. Miss Ettio Richardson, Mrs. Annie L Saylor, Dr. George Mangold, Father Robert E. Lucey, Dr. Miriam Van Waters, Joseph Scott, Irving I. I.ipsitch, Dr. Dorothea Moore, Judge j Robert II. Scott.
Special sessions will deal with time guidance of modern youth, com- I munity organization in regard to leis- | ure time guidance, big brothers and j big sisters and education for leisure time.
Daily sessions will be held for parents non-professional workers, and volunteer workers, these are scheduled for 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.; in addition a special 4 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. course for professional juvenile wel. fate workers Is announced.
CEREMONIES END UNIVERSITY DAYS
Over Seventeen Hundred Graduates Receive Degrees and Awards in Coliseum.
The climax of a college career came for the graduating class of the Univcisity of Southern California on Saturday, June 8, when the 46th annual commencement was held in the Los Angeles Coliseum at 4 p.m. with the community attending the exercises.
Garbed in cap and gown, with aca-Oemic hoods of colored velvet and silk falling from their shoulders, the seniors in the collegiate jn'ocession assembled on the campus, marched through Expositon Park, and then participated in the S. C. commencement program in the stadium.
The University of Southern California holds but one public commencement program a year, in June, so that those students who completed their college work in February, and some who will finish their courses during the summer school, were included in the graduating group on Saturday.
Trustees of the university and the president's party climaxed the academic pageant. The ceremony had af its effective finale two bugle calls —taps were sounded first, indicating the close of college days, and then j reveille, to signify the beginning ot I the days of active life of the graduates.
Alice Gentle, dramatic soprano and opera star, gave a vocal selection.
Charles Frederick Wright, permanent president of the class of 19-9 of Southern California, delivered the class oration, his topic being “An Appeal to the Schoolroom.” The University band rendered the Raymond Overture.
Honors were awarded publicly to the meritorious students.
Lloyd Thomas, 3-year Trojan football and basketball star, received the Trojan Diamond medal for physical accomplishment, awarded annually by Harry Lee Martin, S. C. alumnus (Continued on Page Two)
President Outlines Functions of Governmental Rule
Rufus B. von KleinSmid
With the growth of American cities must necessarily come the extension and development of departments of city and county government to provide adequate direction of public utilities and protection to life, health, and property of citizens. These and other public benefits can be realized best through the functioning of governmental agencies such as bureaus and departments of accounting and assessments, of planning and zoning, of housing, sanitary engineering. water supply, juvenile welfare, recreation and parks, and the like.
Prosperity, culture, and a large measure of freedom for the enjoyment of an enriched living are direct outcomes of city life. Each of these material and human blessings has developed with the centering of population in the cities of our land. City life releases creative energy made possible through leisure time. The city and modern civilization advance side by side. Group life, whether in city or organized rural districts, calls for the operaton of social controls such as were not required in decades past. These controls are made ef. fective through the agencies of government, created in the interest of group welfare.
The efficient functioning of a governmental agency depends upon the special service rendered and upon the knowledge, judgment, and skill of the human agents employed. In the interests of broadening and clarifying their vision of public needs and of offering an opportunity to acquire the knowledge and skills essential in the economical and judicious performance of public services the University of Southern California has established for employed city and county officials a June Short Course in “Citizenship and Public Administration" which now enters auspiciously upon its second annual program.
The instructional staff provided for the 1929 lectures and round table discussions includes the acknowledged leaders in their several fields. These discussions will surely result in a better and clearer understanding of the responsibilities assumed by public officials and will give a more certain grasp of the techniques to be employed in the several departments of city and couuty government.
It. B. von KleinSmid.
EDUCATION TREND DISCUSSION TOPIC
School Trustees Section Consider Problems Confronting Board Members and Administrators.
Is education becoming professionalized? This is one of the topics discussed by the School Trustees Section of the short summer course in public administration on the Trojan campus, which opened Monday, June 3.
Problems that confront the average layman in the performance of his duties as a school board member are being covered In five dally sessions, attended by school trustees and school administrators, and devoted to the following subjects:
1. The place of education in modern life; importance of education to the maintenance of national and state institutions, political. social, and economic; policy of mass education in the United States; the professionalization of education.
2. Powers, duties, and responsibilities of board members and boards of education.
3. Public relationships of the board of education, In dealing with petitions, delegations, patrons; accounting to the public for expenditure of money for educational results; keeping the public informed.
4. Relation of the board of education to superintendent and staff.
5. Control of public finance, sources of school income, estimating receipts, and budgetary procedure.
The revised California School Code (Continued on Pago Three)
NOTICE
The section registered in Public Administration has grown to such an extent that the lecture room used heretofore is inadequate, making it necessary to move into larger quarters immediately. This section will meet from now on in room 304, Bo. vard Administration Building.
FIGURES GIVEN ON PREVIOUS SESSION
The following statistics were gained from the report of First Annual School of Citizenship and Public Administration which was held August 13 to IS, 1928, at the University of Southern California:
I. Attendance
(a) Individual attendance in various sections—749 .
(b) Total Section attendance—
Monday ...........................-........... 771
Tuesday ...................................... 965
Wednesday ................................1010
Thursday .......................-...........1059
Friday ..........................................1151
Saturday .....................-............... 474
Total ...................................5430
II. Geographical Distribution
(a) Number of cities and towns represented—50.
(b) Number of states—7
Seven hundred and forty-nine public officials from 5G cities and towns in seven state attended. Municipalities represented were Alhambra', Amarillo, Texas; Anaheim, Bakersfield. Belvedere, Berkeley, Beverly Hills, Boise, Idaho; Bryn Mawr, Pa.; Burbank, Compton, Covina. Coronado, Culver City, El Monte, Fillmore. Fort Collins. Colo.; Fresno, Glendale, Glendora, Hollywood. Huntington Park, Ingewood. La Canada, La Cres-centa, Las Cruces, Lomita, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Monrovia. Ontario, Oroville, Palos Verdes, Pasadena, South Pasadena, Phoenix, Ariz.: Pomona, Philadelphia. Pa.; Redondo Beach, Riverside, San Bernardino. San Diego. San Fernando. San Francisco, San Gabriel, Santa Ana, Santa Barbara. Santa Monica, Sawtelle, Temple, Tujunga, Van Xuys, Venice. Ventura, Whittier, Wilmington.
III. Public Occupations and Positions Represented in Membership.
Assessors and Tax Collectors.
Board of Education and Superin tendents of Schools.
Bureau of Budgets and Efficiency.
Building Departments and Building Inspectors.
Chambers of Commerce, Clubs, and (Continued on Page Three)
Civic Educators Meet At Trojan Progress Dinner
Lecturers in Short Course Deliver Addresses; Munro Guest Speaker.
A Civic Progress banquet was given by the School of Citizenship and Public Administration Tuesday, May
14. In the Trojan Student Union which served as a forerunner of the summer “short course” In public administration which opened at S. C. Monday, June 10, and will continue until June 21.
Dr. William B. Munro of Harvard University, vice-president of the national Municipal league, was guest speaker. He talked on “Progress and Educational Attitude In Civic Administration.”
J. W. Charlcvllle, City Manager of Glendale, acted as toastmaster of the evening function. President Rufus
B. von KleinSmid of the University of Southern California welcomed the ! guests. ,
“Civic Education Facts for 1929” was the topic of a talk by Emery Olsen. The dinner gathering was attended by mayors, city managers, counciimen, department heads, county boards of supervisors, state officials and those engaged in municipal government and civic affairs in the southwest section of the state.
Among those who attended were Forrest V. Routt, Snpt. of Schools Alhambra; L. W. Boyden, President of the Board of Education, Alhambra; A. B. Stockburger, City Manager, Alhambra; Chris Campbell. Pres. City Commissioners, Alhambra; Otto N. Rugen, City Engineer, IA1-hambra; Thomas B. Downer, Chief Engineer and Supt. of Water Dept., Alhambra; J. W. Price, City Manager, Anaheim; W. L Bigham, Pres. Planning Commission, Anaheim; E. R. Hapgood, City Engineer, Anaheim; L. E. Miller, Mayor of Anaheim; R.
E. Ashe, Supervisor 5th District, Bakersfield; C. W. Horack, Associate in Mech. Engineering, U. of California, (guest); Carol Aronovici, City Planner. Beverly Hills: C. (A. Dickson, Mayor of Compton; Mrs. Belle W. Day, Clerk Board of School Trustees, Culver City; Pearl Merrill, School Trustee, Culver City; Harvey W. Kinkiad, Councilman and Police Commissioner, Culver City; W. H. Woolomes, Supervisor Kern County; J. A. Cummings, Captain of Police, El Segundo; R. Hutchins, City Bn. gineer, El Segundo; E. M. Miller, Health Officer, Glendale; O. J. Renfrew. Supt. Parks and Recreation, Glendale; Clarence E. Kimlin, Mayor
(Continued on Page Three)
SUMMER SCHOOL DATES RELEASED
Dates for the 23rd Annual Summer Session of the University of Southern California are announced by President von KleinSmid of the Trojan institution as follows:
Eight-Weeks Session—June 18 to i August 11.
Six-Weeks Session — July 2 to August 11.
Post-Summer Session — August 13 to Sept. 4.
Modern methods of teaching will lie emphasized in the 1928 Summer School at Southern California, with the ifrogram also including courses in art, architecture, economics, commerce, languages, literature, physical education, political science, music, and dramatics.
Enrollment is open to those' who desire summer study for personal or professional improvement, as well as college students, teachers, school administrators, superintendents, and j supervisors.

SCHOOL OF CITIZENSHIP
Deadline for all announcements and material for issues of the Short Course Trojan is 11 o’clock preceding date of publication. Material should be left at Mr. Olson’s office in room 251 of the Administration Building.
The Short Course Trojan will be issued each Tuesday and Friday during the two-weeks' session. Copies will be distributed free to all students and faculty members from the Students’ Store which is located in the Student Union.
ADMINISTRATION
AND
PUBLIC
VOLUME II.
Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, June 12, 1929.
NUMBER 1
Health Of Cities Subject Of New Chemistry Study
Braun Corporation Establishes Lectureship in Administration Course.
Providing a concentrated, semi-technical college course in Municipal Chemistry and Testing, a special lectureship has been established by the Braun Corporation of Los Angeles in the Division of Public Administration of the university.
J. A. Hartley, president of the Braun Corporation, states that in this educational program an opportunity is offered for the more efficient solution of chemical problems affecting the health and welfare of citizens.
Chemical aspects of sewage and waste disposal and water purification will be covered in the lectures.
A committee co-operating with the Division of Public Administration of S.C. in presenting the topics includes the following, of which Dr. K. V. Stone of the Los lAngeles County Health Department is chairman:
Frank Marks, City Chemist of Pasadena.
Herbert Goodall, City Chemist of Long Beach.
J. Y. Jewett, Testing Engineer of San Diego.
Dr. VV. II. Eaton, City Health Officer of Santa Barbara.
M. J. Holmes, of the Braun Corporation.
Dr. D. Weynik. Chemist of the Association Laboratory of Anaheim.
Dr. Carl Wilson of the Los Angeles Water Department.
AV. T. Knowlton of the City Engineers.
E. O. Slater; Arthur Maas; H. L. Payne; W. H. Laury.
John Carmen of the Los Angeles Health Department.
R. P. Goudey, resident engineer of the State Department of Public Health.
LAW DEANS FROM EAST MEMBERS OF FACULTY
Two deans from other states are included in the list of visiting faculty professors to teach in the 1929 Summer Session of the School of I*aw of the University of Southern California, which opens Monday, June 17, according to announcement of Dr. Justin Miller, Dean of the Trojan I .aw School.
Dean Malcolm McDermott of the College of Law of the University ot Tennessee and Dean Julian S. Waterman of the College of Daw of the University of Arkansas are to be in Los Angeles for the June 17 to August 30 session. Another visiting professor on the S. C. campus this summer is Professor Rudolf Hirsch-berg of the Institute of Air Law of the University ot Koenigsberg, Germany.
COURSE REPORTS MAY BE SECURED
Registered students in the summer course in public administration may order copies of the proceedings in each sei-tioin at a cost of $1.50 per section. The price to persons not registered in the short course will be $3.op per section.
Through special gifts, students in the Sanitary Engineering, Water Supply, anil Planning and Zoning Sections will be provided with copies of the Proceedings of their Sections without cost J
Order blanks may be filled out for 1hese Proceedings in the office of the School of Citizenship and Public Administration, I Room 251.
ROWELL TO TALK ON YOUTH TOPIC
i Publicist to Deliver Lectures on j Juvenile Welfare in Relation to Democracy.
Chester II. Rowell, publicist, is to lecture on youth and democracy during the second annual short course in public administration of the University of Southern California. Division B, starting Monday, June 17.
Others to participate in a program dealing with juvenile welfare are Huron Pitts, Dr. l^eRoy Bowman of Columbia University, John Collier, Will C. Wood, and Benjamin P. Pearson.
Co-operating with the University of Southern California in providing a summer course covering community responsibility for juvenile life are Bishop W. Bertrand Stevens, Dean Justin Miller of the Trojan Uw School. Miss Ettio Richardson, Mrs. Annie L Saylor, Dr. George Mangold, Father Robert E. Lucey, Dr. Miriam Van Waters, Joseph Scott, Irving I. I.ipsitch, Dr. Dorothea Moore, Judge j Robert II. Scott.
Special sessions will deal with time guidance of modern youth, com- I munity organization in regard to leis- | ure time guidance, big brothers and j big sisters and education for leisure time.
Daily sessions will be held for parents non-professional workers, and volunteer workers, these are scheduled for 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.; in addition a special 4 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. course for professional juvenile wel. fate workers Is announced.
CEREMONIES END UNIVERSITY DAYS
Over Seventeen Hundred Graduates Receive Degrees and Awards in Coliseum.
The climax of a college career came for the graduating class of the Univcisity of Southern California on Saturday, June 8, when the 46th annual commencement was held in the Los Angeles Coliseum at 4 p.m. with the community attending the exercises.
Garbed in cap and gown, with aca-Oemic hoods of colored velvet and silk falling from their shoulders, the seniors in the collegiate jn'ocession assembled on the campus, marched through Expositon Park, and then participated in the S. C. commencement program in the stadium.
The University of Southern California holds but one public commencement program a year, in June, so that those students who completed their college work in February, and some who will finish their courses during the summer school, were included in the graduating group on Saturday.
Trustees of the university and the president's party climaxed the academic pageant. The ceremony had af its effective finale two bugle calls —taps were sounded first, indicating the close of college days, and then j reveille, to signify the beginning ot I the days of active life of the graduates.
Alice Gentle, dramatic soprano and opera star, gave a vocal selection.
Charles Frederick Wright, permanent president of the class of 19-9 of Southern California, delivered the class oration, his topic being “An Appeal to the Schoolroom.” The University band rendered the Raymond Overture.
Honors were awarded publicly to the meritorious students.
Lloyd Thomas, 3-year Trojan football and basketball star, received the Trojan Diamond medal for physical accomplishment, awarded annually by Harry Lee Martin, S. C. alumnus (Continued on Page Two)
President Outlines Functions of Governmental Rule
Rufus B. von KleinSmid
With the growth of American cities must necessarily come the extension and development of departments of city and county government to provide adequate direction of public utilities and protection to life, health, and property of citizens. These and other public benefits can be realized best through the functioning of governmental agencies such as bureaus and departments of accounting and assessments, of planning and zoning, of housing, sanitary engineering. water supply, juvenile welfare, recreation and parks, and the like.
Prosperity, culture, and a large measure of freedom for the enjoyment of an enriched living are direct outcomes of city life. Each of these material and human blessings has developed with the centering of population in the cities of our land. City life releases creative energy made possible through leisure time. The city and modern civilization advance side by side. Group life, whether in city or organized rural districts, calls for the operaton of social controls such as were not required in decades past. These controls are made ef. fective through the agencies of government, created in the interest of group welfare.
The efficient functioning of a governmental agency depends upon the special service rendered and upon the knowledge, judgment, and skill of the human agents employed. In the interests of broadening and clarifying their vision of public needs and of offering an opportunity to acquire the knowledge and skills essential in the economical and judicious performance of public services the University of Southern California has established for employed city and county officials a June Short Course in “Citizenship and Public Administration" which now enters auspiciously upon its second annual program.
The instructional staff provided for the 1929 lectures and round table discussions includes the acknowledged leaders in their several fields. These discussions will surely result in a better and clearer understanding of the responsibilities assumed by public officials and will give a more certain grasp of the techniques to be employed in the several departments of city and couuty government.
It. B. von KleinSmid.
EDUCATION TREND DISCUSSION TOPIC
School Trustees Section Consider Problems Confronting Board Members and Administrators.
Is education becoming professionalized? This is one of the topics discussed by the School Trustees Section of the short summer course in public administration on the Trojan campus, which opened Monday, June 3.
Problems that confront the average layman in the performance of his duties as a school board member are being covered In five dally sessions, attended by school trustees and school administrators, and devoted to the following subjects:
1. The place of education in modern life; importance of education to the maintenance of national and state institutions, political. social, and economic; policy of mass education in the United States; the professionalization of education.
2. Powers, duties, and responsibilities of board members and boards of education.
3. Public relationships of the board of education, In dealing with petitions, delegations, patrons; accounting to the public for expenditure of money for educational results; keeping the public informed.
4. Relation of the board of education to superintendent and staff.
5. Control of public finance, sources of school income, estimating receipts, and budgetary procedure.
The revised California School Code (Continued on Pago Three)
NOTICE
The section registered in Public Administration has grown to such an extent that the lecture room used heretofore is inadequate, making it necessary to move into larger quarters immediately. This section will meet from now on in room 304, Bo. vard Administration Building.
FIGURES GIVEN ON PREVIOUS SESSION
The following statistics were gained from the report of First Annual School of Citizenship and Public Administration which was held August 13 to IS, 1928, at the University of Southern California:
I. Attendance
(a) Individual attendance in various sections—749 .
(b) Total Section attendance—
Monday ...........................-........... 771
Tuesday ...................................... 965
Wednesday ................................1010
Thursday .......................-...........1059
Friday ..........................................1151
Saturday .....................-............... 474
Total ...................................5430
II. Geographical Distribution
(a) Number of cities and towns represented—50.
(b) Number of states—7
Seven hundred and forty-nine public officials from 5G cities and towns in seven state attended. Municipalities represented were Alhambra', Amarillo, Texas; Anaheim, Bakersfield. Belvedere, Berkeley, Beverly Hills, Boise, Idaho; Bryn Mawr, Pa.; Burbank, Compton, Covina. Coronado, Culver City, El Monte, Fillmore. Fort Collins. Colo.; Fresno, Glendale, Glendora, Hollywood. Huntington Park, Ingewood. La Canada, La Cres-centa, Las Cruces, Lomita, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Monrovia. Ontario, Oroville, Palos Verdes, Pasadena, South Pasadena, Phoenix, Ariz.: Pomona, Philadelphia. Pa.; Redondo Beach, Riverside, San Bernardino. San Diego. San Fernando. San Francisco, San Gabriel, Santa Ana, Santa Barbara. Santa Monica, Sawtelle, Temple, Tujunga, Van Xuys, Venice. Ventura, Whittier, Wilmington.
III. Public Occupations and Positions Represented in Membership.
Assessors and Tax Collectors.
Board of Education and Superin tendents of Schools.
Bureau of Budgets and Efficiency.
Building Departments and Building Inspectors.
Chambers of Commerce, Clubs, and (Continued on Page Three)
Civic Educators Meet At Trojan Progress Dinner
Lecturers in Short Course Deliver Addresses; Munro Guest Speaker.
A Civic Progress banquet was given by the School of Citizenship and Public Administration Tuesday, May
14. In the Trojan Student Union which served as a forerunner of the summer “short course” In public administration which opened at S. C. Monday, June 10, and will continue until June 21.
Dr. William B. Munro of Harvard University, vice-president of the national Municipal league, was guest speaker. He talked on “Progress and Educational Attitude In Civic Administration.”
J. W. Charlcvllle, City Manager of Glendale, acted as toastmaster of the evening function. President Rufus
B. von KleinSmid of the University of Southern California welcomed the ! guests. ,
“Civic Education Facts for 1929” was the topic of a talk by Emery Olsen. The dinner gathering was attended by mayors, city managers, counciimen, department heads, county boards of supervisors, state officials and those engaged in municipal government and civic affairs in the southwest section of the state.
Among those who attended were Forrest V. Routt, Snpt. of Schools Alhambra; L. W. Boyden, President of the Board of Education, Alhambra; A. B. Stockburger, City Manager, Alhambra; Chris Campbell. Pres. City Commissioners, Alhambra; Otto N. Rugen, City Engineer, IA1-hambra; Thomas B. Downer, Chief Engineer and Supt. of Water Dept., Alhambra; J. W. Price, City Manager, Anaheim; W. L Bigham, Pres. Planning Commission, Anaheim; E. R. Hapgood, City Engineer, Anaheim; L. E. Miller, Mayor of Anaheim; R.
E. Ashe, Supervisor 5th District, Bakersfield; C. W. Horack, Associate in Mech. Engineering, U. of California, (guest); Carol Aronovici, City Planner. Beverly Hills: C. (A. Dickson, Mayor of Compton; Mrs. Belle W. Day, Clerk Board of School Trustees, Culver City; Pearl Merrill, School Trustee, Culver City; Harvey W. Kinkiad, Councilman and Police Commissioner, Culver City; W. H. Woolomes, Supervisor Kern County; J. A. Cummings, Captain of Police, El Segundo; R. Hutchins, City Bn. gineer, El Segundo; E. M. Miller, Health Officer, Glendale; O. J. Renfrew. Supt. Parks and Recreation, Glendale; Clarence E. Kimlin, Mayor
(Continued on Page Three)
SUMMER SCHOOL DATES RELEASED
Dates for the 23rd Annual Summer Session of the University of Southern California are announced by President von KleinSmid of the Trojan institution as follows:
Eight-Weeks Session—June 18 to i August 11.
Six-Weeks Session — July 2 to August 11.
Post-Summer Session — August 13 to Sept. 4.
Modern methods of teaching will lie emphasized in the 1928 Summer School at Southern California, with the ifrogram also including courses in art, architecture, economics, commerce, languages, literature, physical education, political science, music, and dramatics.
Enrollment is open to those' who desire summer study for personal or professional improvement, as well as college students, teachers, school administrators, superintendents, and j supervisors.